Antonio Goston, 26, was arrested May 23 in Fort Worth, Texas, on charges stemming from the shooting at the What’s Up Tavern in April, according to Calumet City police. Goston is to appear in Markham Court for a bond hearing this morning, police said.

Calumet City police were called to the nightclub about 1:45 a.m. on April 21 and found three people on the ground with gunshot wounds, police said. One of them, Willie Randall White Jr., 24, of Merrillville, Ind., was dead.

Police said White and another man had intervened when they saw several people harassing a woman in the bar’s parking lot, police said. White and the other man and a woman were shot by one of them, police said.

When police arrived, Archie Chambers, 19, of Chicago, fired at officers and a crowd that had gathered outside the club, police said. The officers returned fire, and Chambers ran south of the club and jumped a fence, where police later found him dead of gunshot wounds.

Police said they found a gun on Chambers’ body following the shooting, though Chambers’ sister has said relatives do not believe he fired on police.

Arshanette Chambers said she was told by friends that her brother did wield a gun after his friend had been shot dead, but he had thrown the gun down and was hopping over a gate when he was shot.

Police were able to identifiy Goston as one of the suspects in the shootings, and he was brought back to Illinois on Tuesday, according to police.

Goston was on parole in a 2008 drug case in which he was sentenced to three years in prison.

A Mundelein teenager was ordered Tuesday afternoon to remain in a juvenile detention facility at least until she’s 20 years old for the murder of her 11-year-old sister, but will be released by the time she’s 21.

Addressing the Lake County Board's Law and Judicial Committee on Tuesday, Lake County Undersheriff Ray Rose described a pattern of recidivism that can form when an individual with mental-health issues ends up being arrested.